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For 14 years, John Carpenter lived under a
shadow of suspicion. He and his wife Diane, who reconciled after
Crane’s death, went from neighborhood to neighborhood, often seeing
hard stares and hearing whispers about his possible role in his
friend’s death.
He was arrested for murder in June 1992.
“Believe it or not,” his wife said, “he’s relieved. He’s tired of
running. I know he’s absolutely innocent and he will prove it.”
Carpenter’s attorney, Gary Fleischman, seconded
Diane’s claims. Carpenter would not fight extradition. “My client
is eager to speed his return to Arizona to clear his name,” Fleischman
declared. “I can see no useful purpose to keeping him in jail here.
He wants to get this behind him. This has been hanging over his head
for 14 years. He’s glad that this has finally come to pass.”
The lag time between the murder and an arrest
led some to ask, “Who was in charge of the investigation – Colonel
Klink?”
About a year before the arrest, Carpenter gave
an interview in which he claimed, “I never even had a fight with Bob.
He was my friend. And he was the goose who laid the golden egg for
me, in terms of meeting ladies.”
Carpenter was finally charged because someone
noticed a speck, about one 16th of an inch in diameter, in a
photograph of the door panel in the rented Cordoba he drove on the
night of Crane’s murder. The speck itself no longer existed but
experts believed it could be positively identified as a piece of human
tissue, probably brain matter.
Bob Shutts, Maricopa County deputy attorney,
argued to the jury that Carpenter, “fed off the fame and energy of the
actor. Bob Crane became a source of women that he could never obtain
for himself.” The prosecutor said that Carpenter feared or knew that
Crane would break off their friendship and murdered him in
retaliation. The weapon, according to Shutts, was a camera tripod
that has never been found.
Inevitably, some of the evidence was lurid. At
one point, the prosecution wanted to show the jury a 16-year-old,
black-and-white video of Crane, Carpenter and a woman engaged in a
sexual threesome. The defense objected that the film would “inflame
the passions of the jury.”
The objection was overruled and the tape was
shown. Superior Court Judge Gregory Martin instructed the jury that
they should not regard the video as showing the defendant as a “bad
person” but evidence that he and the deceased had a relationship.
The genitals were electronically blurred. The
tape lasted about 10 minutes. Most of the jurors watched without
expression although one man briefly looked away.
Experts testified for the prosecution that the
photographed speck on the door of Carpenter’s rented car was tissue
from a brain. The defense put on experts who said that could not be
proven. They also pointed out that there was a blonde hair found in
the victim’s room that had never been identified. Crane’s sexual
exploits meant that he could have easily infuriated a sexual partner
or jealous boyfriend or husband. They asserted that there was no
solid evidence of any estrangement between the actor and Carpenter.
The jury came back with a verdict of not guilty.
The foreperson explained the acquittal by saying
the most important evidence was inconclusive. “What was the speck?”
juror Marine Sgt. Michael Lake asked. “Nobody knows what it was, not
even the doctors.”
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| Bob Crane
publicity photo |
John Carpenter, then 66, was jubilant. “My life
is back together again after 16 years,” he said. As the verdict was
read, Diana Carpenter burst into tears and said, “It’s over, it’s
over.”
Four years later, in 1998, Carpenter died of a
heart attack.
Filmmaker Paul Schrader released Auto Focus,
a movie about Bob Crane’s life and death, on October 18, 2002.
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